The New York Times commissioned this growing logo design for their fall 2011 travel issue. Los Angeles-based garden designer Judy Kameon designed and planted the iconic T, keeping in mind shape, texture and a selected color palette.

22Squared, a multi-locale branding and design agency, helped Red Brick Atlanta Brewing Company redesign their brand and connect with their customer base at a deeper level. Their redesign helped focus the brand to their southern market, pitching a friendly, special product made just for the sophisticated southerner.

DKNG is the combined multidisciplinary studio of Dan Kuhlken and Nathan Goldman. This project—a show poster for the band Explosions in the Sky—is especially beautiful, with a variety of graphic treatments and styles converging to create the final, mystical design (with a great color palette to boot).

What designer doesn't love a good ampersand (tell me!)? It's apparent that Ross Moody does at least—his self run "Greetings Collective," 55 Hi's, is currently featuring a curated collection of 10 9x9" prints of original ampersands created by illustrators and designers rounded up from across the interwebs.

The University of Arizona Men's Basketball squad is one of nine elite teams who will soon don new Nike Hyper Elite Platinum uniform. Nike's selectees for the new gear (seven men's team and two women's) are from those who have won national championships in the past while sporting Nike gear.

DC Comics has unveiled a new identity, which—as is often the case with logo overhauls—has met it's fair share of criticism and praise. For fans and casual consumers alike, there's a lot of emotion tied to the former logo's association with so many wonderful stories. When you break that emotional bond, people feel strange. DC's '76 mark was a classic, the '05 remix was a departure but also ushered in a raft of DC-certified movies. Here in '12 we have a clean break from the past. I felt this way when UPS updated their logo.

Alright, I know I shared a video from One Year Study yesterday, but after further exploring Garrett Johnston's portfolio, I knew I had to share one more. This video was produced in partnership with Public School, a creative studio in Austin